Processing of Tissues

PROCESSING OF TISSUES

  • Most of the fixatives employed are aqueous and water has to be removed in order to embed the tissue in paraffin wax.
  • The loaded tissue capsule should be filled in a cotton gauze and is placed under tap water or in a tissue washing tank, which is connected to running water source.
  • The water flow should be adjusted to maintain a slow but continuous flow.
  • At least six hours flow is essential to wash off the preservative thoroughly from the tissues.

The major steps of tissue processing are

  • Dehydration
  • Clearing
  • Infiltration and Impregnation 
  • Embedding

DEHYDRATION

  • It is process by which water is removed from fixed tissues, by passing the tissues in ascending grades of alcohol to prevent undue shrinkage of tissues.
    • Ethyl alcohol 50% - 8 hours
    • Ethyl alcohol 70% - 2 hours
    • Ethyl alcohol 90% - 2 hours
    • Absolute alcohol – I - 1 hour
    • Absolute alcohol – II - 1 hour
  • Dioxane can be used instead of alcohol. Here shrinkage is minimum and dehydration is quick.

CLEARING

  • Removes alcohol from the tissues and prepare them for penetration by paraffin during embedding. Clearing agent commonly used is Xylene.
    • Xylol - I    - 30 min.
    • Xylol – II - 30 min.
  •  After clearing, tissues appears transparent
  • Xylol is cheap and quick in action – makes tissues transparent – causes shrinkage and hardening if tissues are kept longer.
  • Other clearing agents are : Cedar–wood oil, toluene, benzene and chloroform, but are expensive.

INFILTRATION AND IMPREGNATION 

  • Usually paraffin  wax  is  used.    It takes place in an oven heated to 54-62 C, the temperature depends on melting point of wax.
  • Tissues are transferred to molten paraffin wax which causes diffusion of xylene into surrounding molten wax (Infiltration).
  • The wax diffuses into tissues to replace xylene (Impregnation ). Minimum two changes in wax (paraffin - melting point 50 to 56C) kept in cups replace the clearing agent.
  • The tissue is kept for 30 minutes in each cup. Over heated wax can cause cooking of the tissues.
  • After cooling, wax provides firmness and support to tissues when these are cut on the microtome.
  • Celloidin is also used.

Click to view video View video...

EMBEDDING

  • It is also known as casting or blocking.
  • Embedding is transferring of infiltrated tissue into molten wax and solidifies into a block when cools down to room temperature. Leuckhart’s L pieces commonly referred as embedding Ls to prepare tissue block.
  • Two L shaped moulds are arranged in the form of a rectangle over a porcelain slab.
  • Melted paraffin is poured into the mould and the tissue is so oriented that the cutting surface of the tissue faces the porcelain slab.
  • The moulds are removed as soon as paraffin sets and the block is ready for sectioning.

Click to view video View video...

Last modified: Saturday, 24 September 2011, 7:12 AM